On that day, when evening had come, he said to them, “Let us go across to the other side.” And leaving the crowd behind, they took him with them in the boat, just as he was. Other boats were with him. A great windstorm arose, and the waves beat into the boat, so that the boat was already being swamped. But he was in the stern, asleep on the cushion; and they woke him up and said to him, “Teacher, do you not care that we are perishing?” He woke up and rebuked the wind, and said to the sea, “Peace! Be still!” Then the wind ceased, and there was a dead calm. He said to them, “Why are you afraid? Have you still no faith? And they were filled with great awe and said to one another, “Who then is this, that even the wind and the sea obey him?”
- Mark 4:35-41
Immediately he made his disciples get into the baot and go on ahead to the other side, to Behsaida, while he dismissed the crowd. After waying farewell to them, he went up on the mountain to pray.
When evening came, the boat was out on the sea, and he was alone on the land. When he saw that they were straining at the oars against an adverse wind, he came towards them early in the morning, walking on the sea. He intended to pass them by. But when they saw him walking on the sea, they thought it was a ghost and cried out; for they all saw him and were terrified. But immediately he spoke to them and said, “Take heart, it is I; do not be afraid.” Then he got into the boat with them and the wind ceased. And they were utterly astounded, for they did not understand about the loaves, but their hearts were hardened.
- Mark 6:45-52
The other week my pastor posed a question in relationship to Mark’s depiction of the demioniac in chapter 5:1-20. Why is it that in this story the thing the disciples fear is not the demons but the transformed (clothed and in right mind) man? I had been pondering this question, finding it an illuminating expression of how it is that we tend to deal with our fears as people. Is it that they deal with their fear by demonizing the other? In this case it makes sense why the transformed man would be the thing they resist, as for as long as one can conflate the demon with the other it means we are on the right side of the equaion.
Or is it that they fear the power of the one who can command the demons? This is certainly a common theme in the Gospel according to Mark, people responding to Jesus’ power in fear. In nearly every case this relates to who Jesus is. There is a sense in which discovering who Jesus is overturns our own lives.
It very well could be both of those things at once. “The other side,” according to my commentaries, was a place known for its association with strange activity. Thus fear would have naturally been built in to these sea crossings. It was when we walked through Chapter 6 this past week, the second storm narrative (6:45-52), that I felt some of my thoughts coming together.
If, as I have reflected on in previous blogs in this space, the opening of Mark 1 awakens us to not just the beginning of the story of Jesus but the beginning of a new creation story (the Gospel which proclaims the arrival and inaugeration of this new creation, also called the arrival of the kingdom of God or “the fulfillment of time”, 1:15), the author of Mark’s Gospel gives us not just a portrait of contrasting kingdoms but contrasting rule. The one who “is more powerful than I,” says John, is coming. And what is the ultimate expression of this coming? Baptizing with the Holy Spirit, the very thing that has the power to transform.
For Mark, the story of Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is marked by his intent to frame it within Israel’s story, conjuring up the picture of Israel as God’s child and firstborn (Exodus 4; Hosea 11:1; Jeremiah 31). The Spirit drives Jesus into the wilderness (which is where John already was proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins, bringing the people from the whole Judean countryside and Jerusalem out to him in 1:4) where Jesus confronts the very powers enslaving God’s good creation, doing what God had promised to do through the raising up of Israel as his covenant people.
From here Mark jumps straight into Jesus’ ministry with the words “follow me.” Jesus is on the move and the called people are called to move with him in this transforming work, leading them straight into a confrontation with the same powers Jesus encountered in the wilderness. Powers that fear Jesus has come to “destroy” them precisely because they know who Jesus is (1:24)
This begins a patterned movement early on in the Gospel according to Mark between Jesus entering houses and synagogues, creating this interesting contrast between those on the inside and those on the outside. The house is a picture of the the temple/tabernacle, which is where God has taken up residence in the midst of a creation enslaved to the Powers of Sin and Death according to the story of Israel (the Torah). It is a microcosm of Eden where Adam and Eve ultimately enter the wilderness. Thus we find the crowds consistently positioned at the doorway, representing that inbetween space of conflict and disruption. And yet the Jesus we encounter in Mark is one who is on the move, and in Chapter 6 we find this pattern giving way to the gradual process of breaking down the walls between the temple and the wilderness. Following a chapter on the nature of God’s kingdom (chapter 4), we have these two framed “storm” passages quoted above marked by getting into the boat and going to the other side, the first indication that what is contained inbetween reflects an important transitional point in the narrative. If the first storm narrative brings about a particular response (“Do you not care that we are perishing”, 4:38), a response that echos the very words of the demons (“Have you come to destroy us”, 1:24), the second storm narrative in chapter 6 is said to evoke fear (“they saw him and were terrified”, 6:50) because they did not understand about the loaves (6:52).
Only a few chapters later the author of Mark will bring in a second framing device using twinned “feeding” stories, underscoring an important connection to the storm narratives, stating again that they do not yet understand. Back in 2:21-28 Jesus is picking grain on the sabbath, leading him to call back to David when challenged to note how David entered the house of God, ate, broke bread and fed the people, an unlawful act in light of the Torah. What then does this mean for Jesus to pick grain on the sabbath? Here the clear indication is that the sabbath is reflective of the arrival of the new careation. Soon we will have this very picture being applied to breaking loaves and feeding the crowds in the wilderness- creation being tranformed.
Thus, if the feeding is positioned here within two storm narratives as the “point,” it seems a fair to suggest that the reason they fear the transformed man seems intimately tied to what Jesus is doing in the wilderness. To feed the crowds, when seen in light of the gathering of the grain on the sabbath for the sake of this feeding, belongs to the same act of transofrming the world Jesus is bringing the Spirit to. Indeed, what is even more interesting is what ultimately brings us to this second storm passage, which is the stunning statment that Jesus has no power in his hometown (6:5), indicating that the movement of the Spirit is to be found in the wilderness. It is for this reason that Jesus calls the twelve (evoking the story of Israel) and sends them out into the wilderness two by two (which reflects the concern for proper “witness” within the law), giving them the same authority we find them fearing in response to seeing the transformed man- authority over the enslaving powers. A point of transition that is then marked by the death of John the Baptist, a narrative move that brings us all the way back to the beginning of chapter 1 and the one who is “more powerful” coming to baptize in the Spirit. Now the disciples are the ones casting out demons.and bringing about transformation in others.
What’s even more striking? The fact that the crowds who have recognized Jesus to this point now recognize the disciples/apostles (6:30-37), which is where the disciples urge Jesus to send them away so that they might buy their own food. Jesus’ response? “You give them something to eat.” (6:37) In the second feeding the story it is not resistance to the feeding that marks the disciples repeated command to “feed” the people (8:1-3) but the question “how can one feed” these people in the wilderness.
Just as the disciples are now casting out demons as Jesus did, the feeding of the crowd is followed by Jesus sending the disciples to the other side on their own (reversing Jesus’ movement of going ahead of the disciples), Jesus insstead ascending the mountain in the manner of Moses. Lest we forget the ways in which Jesus is being framed within the story of Israel. This is when the storm comes. One feature of this narrative point is the fact that the storm comes early in the evening and Jesus doess not go out until early in the morning, This indicates a whole night of “straining at the oars against the adverse winds.” Another distinguishing factor of this second storm narrative- they weren’t in danger. They were struggling to get to the other side. This is where we get the language of Jesus walking on the sea (evoking this image of something only God can do), with the intention of Jesus passing them by. Rather than this being a phrase that suggests neglect, its a phrase that indicates the arrival of God’s presence. Just as God’s presence passes by Moses, it passes by the disciples. It is a revelatory picture which once again brings about a response of fear. Fear that exist because they failed to understand the loaves. The very thing Jesus was gaethering grain for back in chapter 1.
So here is the lingering question- if they had understood the loaves how and in what way would this have addressed their fear? I feel like the narrative wants us as readers to connect this to the fear they have over seeing the transformed man. This is the question I am now sitting with. After all, they have now been casting out the demons and seeing the transformation through the Spirit working in their own hands. Which leads me to wonder if this fear would not be connected to something more fundamental. Something indicative of the larger reality this Gospel is proclaiming regarding the inbreaking of the kingdom and the transformation that its liberation from the enslaving powers means.
It feels like the same thing we find in the story of Israel and the people grumbling in the wilderness, echoing the eventual exasperation of the disciples- how can we feed the people (manna) in the wilderness? That somehow this liberation from slavery that brings us into the wilderness is precisely the thing that breeds this fear.
How can this be that the liberative act is followed up by this movement into a space that feels antithetical to what we might expect by such a fulfillment. In this sense the transformed man breeds fear precisely because of what it means for where the disciples are being called to go. Its an interesting thought. We all occupy this space in the wilderness. We are all part of the crowd standing between the doorway of hope on one side and despair on the other. In what sense does that space feel safer than the demons on one side and the transformation on the other? Is it that entering the house means being sent into the wilderness? Is this the nature of the inbreaking of God’s kingdom in an already-not yet reality? This inevitable sense that transformation means being awakened to not just the demons out there but the demons inside our own home and the responsibility this places to follow Jesus into the wilderness. And yet, to do so is precisely where we find the transformation of our home as well.
It’s this stark reality that is most difficult though- in an already-not-yet inbreaking of the kingdom we are called the carry the tension, not do away with it. In this sense I wonder if the fear is the awareness that seeing the transformed man means having to face the demons themselves. This resistance to this participatory nature of the Gospel. The very thing that leads to having to row against the winds of resistance with all of our questions and uncertainties. The Gospel according ot Mark tells us that this is precisely when and where God passes us by. We might feel like we are left fending for ourselves, when the point is that God is still going ahead of us in the struggle, making the new creation reality known through this participation. God is at work making all things new, feeding the world in the wilderness. This is the art of learning to see Jesus rather than a ghost.























